WASHINGTON: US secretary of state Marco Rubio said on Wednesday the US under president Donald Trump remained committed to the Philippines defence, as tensions simmer with Beijing in the South China Sea.
In a call with his Philippine counterpart Enrique Manalo, Rubio underscored the USs ironclad commitments to the Philippines under our mutual defence treaty, state department spokesman Tammy Bruce said.
Rubio, a longtime hawk on China, discussed the dangerous and destabilising actions in the South China Sea by Beijing, formally known as the Peoples Republic of China (PRC).
Secretary Rubio conveyed that the PRCs behaviour undermines regional peace and stability and is inconsistent with international law, Bruce said.
US leaders have repeatedly stood by the Philippines, a treaty ally and former US colony.
However, Trump is known for questioning alliances, including Nato, claiming allied nations treat the US unfairly by not paying more for defence.
Rubio made the call with his Philippine counterpart a day after a veiled warning to Beijing on the South China Sea during a four-way meeting with his counterparts from India, Japan and Australia.
The Philippines have engaged in increasingly tense confrontations with China over disputed South China Sea waters and reefs over the past year.
China claims most of the strategic waterway despite an international tribunal ruling that its claim lacked any legal basis.